Message ID | alpine.DEB.2.20.1712182255450.7915@digraph.polyomino.org.uk |
---|---|
State | New |
Headers | show |
Series | Disable -Wrestrict for two nptl/tst-attr3.c tests [committed] | expand |
On 12/18/2017 11:56 PM, Joseph Myers wrote: > nptl/tst-attr3 fails to build with GCC mainline because of > (deliberate) aliasing between the second (attributes) and fourth > (argument to thread start routine) arguments to pthread_create. > > Although both those arguments are restrict-qualified in POSIX, > pthread_create does not actually dereference its fourth argument; it's > an opaque pointer passed to the thread start routine. Thus, the > aliasing is actually valid in this case, I think the restrict requirements extend to called functions as well, due to the way the execution of a block is defined in C11 (“an execution of [a block] B means that portion of the execution of the program that would correspond to the lifetime of an object with scalar type and automatic storage duration associated with B”). The proper fix seems to be to remove the restrict qualifier from the last argument of pthread_create, considering that the thread start routine argument lacks the restrict qualifier, too. Thanks, Florian
On Tue, 19 Dec 2017, Florian Weimer wrote: > On 12/18/2017 11:56 PM, Joseph Myers wrote: > > nptl/tst-attr3 fails to build with GCC mainline because of > > (deliberate) aliasing between the second (attributes) and fourth > > (argument to thread start routine) arguments to pthread_create. > > > > Although both those arguments are restrict-qualified in POSIX, > > pthread_create does not actually dereference its fourth argument; it's > > an opaque pointer passed to the thread start routine. Thus, the > > aliasing is actually valid in this case, > > I think the restrict requirements extend to called functions as well, due to > the way the execution of a block is defined in C11 (“an execution of [a block] > B means that portion of the execution of the program that would correspond to > the lifetime of an object with scalar type and automatic storage duration > associated with B”). This may be another case of glibc (and tests) being written as C with ABI boundaries, so that how pthread_create calls the function is invisible. I also don't think the restrict qualifiers on parameters in headers have any inherent semantic significance in the caller; the warning is heuristically supposing that the definition of the function has the same qualifiers. But as long as the thread start function doesn't modify the object pointed to by its argument it doesn't matter; the aliasing is OK for unmodified objects. > The proper fix seems to be to remove the restrict qualifier from the last > argument of pthread_create, considering that the thread start routine argument > lacks the restrict qualifier, too. The qualifier comes from POSIX. Though as such qualifiers don't affect type compatibility, there's no way for a conforming program to tell whether the qualifier is present or not.
diff --git a/nptl/tst-attr3.c b/nptl/tst-attr3.c index bc23386..420a7db 100644 --- a/nptl/tst-attr3.c +++ b/nptl/tst-attr3.c @@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ #include <unistd.h> #include <stackinfo.h> +#include <libc-diag.h> static void * tf (void *arg) @@ -362,7 +363,16 @@ do_test (void) result = 1; } + DIAG_PUSH_NEEDS_COMMENT; +#if __GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) + /* GCC 8 warns about aliasing of the restrict-qualified arguments + passed &a. Since pthread_create does not dereference its fourth + argument, this aliasing, which is deliberate in this test, cannot + in fact cause problems. */ + DIAG_IGNORE_NEEDS_COMMENT (8, "-Wrestrict"); +#endif err = pthread_create (&th, &a, tf, &a); + DIAG_POP_NEEDS_COMMENT; if (err) { error (0, err, "pthread_create #2 failed"); @@ -388,7 +398,16 @@ do_test (void) result = 1; } + DIAG_PUSH_NEEDS_COMMENT; +#if __GNUC_PREREQ (7, 0) + /* GCC 8 warns about aliasing of the restrict-qualified arguments + passed &a. Since pthread_create does not dereference its fourth + argument, this aliasing, which is deliberate in this test, cannot + in fact cause problems. */ + DIAG_IGNORE_NEEDS_COMMENT (8, "-Wrestrict"); +#endif err = pthread_create (&th, &a, tf, &a); + DIAG_POP_NEEDS_COMMENT; if (err) { error (0, err, "pthread_create #3 failed");